Tengri Innovation Award

Tengri Innovation Award was launched this year to encourage the implementation of sustainable fashion and textiles working towards a more sustainable industry standard and future.

The award was open to final-year students of the Tengri Innovation Partnership, an initiative which includes some of the UK’s most influential academic and creative institutions. Designers were invited to present innovative and sustainable approaches to textiles, to meet criteria set to demonstrate forward-thinking conceptualisation of sustainable fibres and practices that rework cultural and traditional techniques.

We are so thrilled to have launched the awards with such positive engagement. Our new innovation partnership and awards initiative is a key tool of the Tengri manifesto, working towards a society where sustainable and fair share business is the norm and changing the status quo of the fashion and textile industries. To make this change we need to look to our future global citizens, talent and influencers, supporting the development of sustainable commercial production in education and training. We look forward to welcoming the very talented winners of this year’s awards to the Tengri collective.

— Nancy Johnston, Founder of Tengri

The Tengri Innovation Award offers an invaluable opportunity to develop a more systemic approach to design and produce sustainable luxury fabrics. This is an exciting new opportunity for our graduates to apply their unique creativity to explore the potential of yak fibres and celebrate both traditional and future craftsmanship skills. Design responsibility is a core element of our course philosophy and we are delighted that our most talented graduates have been recognised for their in-depth research and textile innovation.

— Anne Marr, Programme Director Textiles at Central Saint Martins

Tengri Innovation Award 2018 – Winner

Henrietta Johns, Central St Martins, Textile Design BA (Hons)

Henrietta’s work is rooted in a deep exploration of natural animal fibres and innovative designs using traditional felting techniques, creating new fabric surfaces with 100% animal fibre.

Runners-up

Christopher Ehrlich, Central Saint Martins, BA Fashion Design - MenswearChristopher is accredited for his conscientious approach to sustainability with one-piece pattern cutting, reinventing a traditional tailoring technique used in the early 1900s.